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3 Sunday Night Lechaims

Akiva Steinmentz (Detroit, MI) and Estee Loschak (S. Barbara, CA)
Lubavitcher Yeshiva, 570 Crown St [hall entrance on Albany Ave]

Moishe Hyman (Pittsburgh, PA) and Yehudis Rodal (Milan, Italy)
Beis Levi Yitzchok, 556 Crown St [entrance on Albany Ave]

Yair Hines (Houston, TX) and Raizy Sessel (Orange, CT)
Jewish Children’s Museum, 792 Eastern Pkwy [corner Kingston Ave]

Three Shluchim, One Family, One Israel Mission

Rabbi Yechezkel Kornfeld of Seattle, along with his sons Rabbi Eli Kornfeld (Chabad of Hunterdon County) and Rabbi Shmuel Kornfeld (Chabad of Burbank) recently returned from Israel after their highly successful Israel Mission. The trip required dedication and resulted in a show of achdus among families, states, and countries.

Op-Ed: Unity Within Comm-unity

by Rabbi Pinchas Allouche

Three Modest Thoughts on the Latest Communal and Global Developments

Winds of uncertainty are blowing across the globe. A tsunami in Japan, renewed terrorist attacks in Israel, a middle-east – from Egypt to Libya, Syria to Yemen – in crisis. And the future remains unsure. Will the sun shine again? Will stability re-emerge after the storm dies down?

Letter: What is Israel Doing Wrong?

October 1973. On Yom Kippur Egypt launched a sudden attack on Israel, which by the skin of its teeth pushed back the enemy force and potential destruction. In the aftermath a doctor from Long Beach, California, asks: Why did this have to happen? Had Israel given back the lands, as promised after the Six Day War, could the Yom Kippur War have been averted?

Japan Earthquake: A Personal Account

by Israel Barker – Lubavitch.com

Shabbat comes once a week here in Tokyo just like anywhere else but because of time zones and the international date line it comes “earlier” than in most Jewish communities. When we are lighting our candles, most Jews in the world are still asleep or maybe enjoying their breakfast. Tokyo is not the easiest place to be Jewish. You cant get much kosher food at the super markets and it is not always easy to live within walking distance of a shul.